Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2003-11-18-Speech-2-148"

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"en.20031118.6.2-148"2
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"Mr President, Commissioner, ladies and gentlemen, the compromise obtained in the conciliation committee in September no more satisfies us than the previous readings did. In view of the very close vote – eight votes in favour and seven against – we are not alone. Mr Jarzembowski has, however, brought all his considerable powers of persuasion to bear. Although we were automatically in agreement with the search for increased efficiency in order to face the challenge of becoming competitive in a globalised economy, we did not want this to be done in any old way, with a single and final objective: the total liberalisation of port services. Technical, social and environmental security must in fact remain the objective to be preserved, whatever the reform implemented. Now, if pilotage has been, on the surface of it, preserved from unbridled competition, the freedom given to each state seems to us to be too great and to contradict the notion of public service, a characteristic that the services in question are acknowledged as possessing, whether by the states themselves or by the Court of Justice of the European Union. Where self-handling is concerned, social and environmental security could, in the same way, be impaired by shipowners directly employing their own equipment and their own staff, who would be inexperienced, untrained and employed on a casual basis. It is unlikely that employees’ social protection and the constraints of optimum security count for very much faced with the search for financial profitability obtained through cheap labour. Whereas the whole chain of services – pilotage, mooring and unloading – requires professionals skilled in these types of activity so as to avoid any risk of accident, self-handling would involve a levelling down of the services provided, as well as of professional qualifications and environmental security, and would also entail a social cost linked to job losses. In conclusion, we reject the creation of ports of convenience and self-handling at terminals."@en1

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